MELD & MELD-Na Calculator
ℹ️ MELD uses floor values: Bilirubin, INR, and Creatinine minimum 1.0. Creatinine capped at 4.0 (patients on dialysis = 4.0).
mg/dL (min 1.0 applied)
International Normalised Ratio (min 1.0)
mg/dL (min 1.0, max 4.0, dialysis = 4.0)
mmol/L — range 125–137 used in MELD-Na
MELD Score
MELD-Na Score
90-day mortality estimate
MELD
score
MELD-Na
score
3-Month Mortality
%

MELD Score — Mortality by Score

MELD Score3-Month MortalityTransplant Priority
< 9~1.9%Low — outpatient management
10–19~6%Moderate — transplant listing consideration
20–29~20%High — active transplant evaluation
30–39~53%Very High — urgent listing
≥ 40>71%Critical — highest priority (1A status)

MELD Formula

MELD = 3.78 × ln(Bilirubin) + 11.2 × ln(INR) + 9.57 × ln(Creatinine) + 6.43
Minimum values: Bili ≥1.0, INR ≥1.0, Cr ≥1.0, Cr max 4.0

MELD-Na = MELD − Na − (0.025 × MELD × (140 − Na)) + 140
Na range clamped to 125–137 mmol/L

MELD-Na vs MELD — Why Sodium Matters

Hyponatraemia in cirrhosis is a marker of advanced disease, portal hypertension, and activated renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system. Patients with the same MELD score but lower serum sodium have significantly higher 90-day waitlist mortality. The United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS) adopted MELD-Na in January 2016, replacing MELD as the primary organ allocation score.

MELD-Na ranges from 6 to 40. A patient with MELD 20 and sodium 128 mmol/L has MELD-Na ≈ 25 — significantly higher priority for organ allocation than their MELD alone would suggest.

MELD 3.0 — The Newest Formula

MELD 3.0 was introduced in 2021 to address sex-based disparities in liver transplantation (women historically had lower access despite equivalent illness severity). MELD 3.0 adds serum albumin and a female sex coefficient: MELD 3.0 = 4.56 × ln(Bili) + 0.82 × (137 − Na) − 0.24 × (137 − Na) × ln(Cr) + 9.09 × ln(INR) + 11.14 × ln(Cr) + 1.85 × (3.5 − Alb) + 1.33 (if female) + 7. Some UNOS regions are transitioning to MELD 3.0.

Clinical Uses Beyond Transplantation

Related Calculators

⚠ Medical Disclaimer: MELD score is a mathematical model validated for prognostication and organ allocation. Clinical decisions regarding transplant listing, surgical risk, and acute management require comprehensive hepatology assessment. MELD does not account for all causes of mortality in liver disease. Always involve a hepatologist or transplant centre for complex decisions.